Archive for HR 3454 Medicare Hospice Reform and Savings Act of 2009
Letter to Secretary Sebelius at HHS: Do the Right Thing…
Posted by: | CommentsLetter to Secretary Sebelius at HHS: Do the Right Thing, Stop Using the Invalid Hospice Cap Regulation!
September 15, 2009
Kathleen Sebelius Secretary, Health and Human ServicesDear Ms. Sebelius:
Re: Hospice Cap Regulation
The National Alliance for Hospice Access (NAHA) represents more than 500 independent hospices in 32 states that serve tens of thousands of patients every year, primarily in rural, minority or economically disadvantaged communities. As you know, NAHA is supporting hospice reform legislation (HR 3454) as well as hospice cap compromise efforts that would improve patient choice, reform the hospice cap, reduce HHS’ administrative burden, and reduce Medicare’s costs by $10 billion to $20 billion over the next ten years. We hope you will consider supporting these reforms…
Read the full text of the NAHA_Board_Letter_to_Sebelius_15Sep09
Federal Court Judge Puts Hold on His Own Nationwide Injunction
Posted by: | CommentsFederal Court Judge Puts Hold on His Own Nationwide Injunction; Will HHS Resume Use of Invalid Hospice Cap Regulation?
On August 20, 2009, Federal district court judge George Wu entered final judgment against the Department of Health and Human Services (read Final Federal Court Judgment Remand) in favor of NAHA member hospice Los Angeles Haven Hospice on its challenge to the hospice cap regulation. In addition to provisions affecting only Haven Hospice, Judge Wu’s decision included a nationwide injunction precluding HHS from using the invalid regulation to calculate any future cap demands. Read More→
Follow HR 3454 Medicare Hospice Reform and Savings Act of 2009 on www.govtrack.us
Posted by: | CommentsYou can follow the progress of our newly introduced legislation, H.R. 3454 Medicare Hospice Reform and Savings Act of 2009, To amend title XVIII of the Social Security Act to reform payments and coverage for hospice care, on GovTrack.US or on the NAHA site.
Federal Judge says “Stop Using Invalid Regulation”
Posted by: | CommentsJudge Tells Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) To Stop Using Invalid Hospice Cap Regulation
On Friday, August 21, 2009, Federal district court judge George Wu entered final judgment against the Department of Health and Human Services (read Final Federal Court Judgment Remand) and in favor of NAHA member hospice Los Angeles Haven Hospice on its challenge to the hospice cap regulation. Read More→
HR 3454 Legislation
Posted by: | CommentsHR 3454 Medicare Hospice Reform and Savings Act of 2009 will amend title XVIII of the Social Security Act to reform payments and coverage for hospice care.
HR 3454 Legislation Information and Resources:
- Full text of proposed HR 3454 legislation
- HR 3454 Legislative Benefits Fact Sheet
- Talking Points for HR 3454 Legislation
- HR 3454 Background Slides
- NAHA Hospice Access Report based on Avalere Data
H.R. 3454: Medicare Hospice Reform and Savings Act of 2009 is an integrated 4-Part reform that would save over $1 billion annually, while improving hospice access and reforming the hospice cap.
National Coverage Determinations (NCDs) – Establishing evidence-based hospice NCDs in 2010 will save $1 billion to $2.5 billion annually and $5 billion to $12.5 billion from 2010 – 2014, while increasing timely patient access to hospice care. Medicare’s current hospice Local Coverage Determinations are not evidence-based, and have resulted in a morass of arbitrary eligibility standards that in practice vary by state, by hospice, by diagnosis and possibly by race. As a result, timely hospice access in America is persistently low and varies widely by state, by diagnosis and by race. This increases Medicare’s costs.
- NCDs would clarify eligibility and increase access from 41% to 60% over the next five years. Such access would save $1 billion per year, according to Duke University’s 2007 research.
- Clarifying eligibility would also increase timely access for 75% of hospice users whose current hospice stays are short. Increasing short stays by an average of only 7 days would save $500 million per year, again according to Duke’s 2007 research.
- NCDs would improve the accuracy of hospice eligibility decisions, and would stop the growth in, and subsequently reduce, length of stay above the 90th percentile, saving $1 billion annually.
Cap Reform – Reforming the retrospective 1982 hospice cap with a pay-as-you-go 10% reduction in per diem routine home care payments as patient stays exceed 180 days, and directing CMS to compromise 2006 – 2008 Cap demands to allow law-abiding hospices to survive, will save Medicare $600 million from 2010 through 2014. It will also allow hundreds of quality hospices to survive the current hospice cap crisis, and to continue to provide cost-effective hospice access for tens of thousands of beneficiaries, especially in rural, minority and economically disadvantaged communities.
- Reducing routine home care payments to hospices by 10% as patient stays exceed 180 days will save CMS about $400 million annually, or $2.0 billion from 2010 through 2014.
- Instructing CMS to compromise 2006, 2007 and 2008 Cap demands to allow law-abiding hospices to survive would cost a maximum of $400 million, on a one-time basis only, and it will preserve access to cost effective care for tens of thousands of beneficiaries.
- Cap reform will reduce CMS hospice payments by $1.6 billion over the next 5 years. Partially offsetting this, CMS will forego collections of no more than $200 million annually from the old 1982 cap. Net, a reformed pay-as-you-go Cap will save $600 million over the next 5 years while at the same time dramatically reducing CMS’ administrative burden and credit risk.
Payment reform - Part 3 of this hospice reform legislation is budget-neutral in every year; it will improve hospice payment accuracy and patient access by increasing routine home care payments for the first five and last five days of every patient’s hospice stay by 20% per diem, self-funded by reducing per diem payments by a further 2.5% (in addition to the 10% in Part 2) as patient stays exceed 180 days.
- This reform will benefit hospices with relatively short lengths of stay that argue that short-stay patients’ expenses are not met by current routine home care per diem reimbursement. The limited payment shift in this Part 3 strikes a balance between meeting the legitimate expenses of short-stay patients, while ensuring that we do not reward hospices that fail to provide timely choice to the terminally ill Medicare beneficiaries in their communities.
Restore the full hospice BNAF, Self-Funded from NCD savings in Part 1 Above - Establishing NCDs will generate measurable savings of $1 billion to $2.5 billion annually for Medicare; full restoration of the BNAF should cost no more than $0.5 billion annually. The BNAF can be fully restored at no cost to the federal government, with significant annual savings left over.
Support HR 3454 Medicare Hospice Reform and Savings Act of 2009
NAHA Endorses Hospice Reform Legislation
Posted by: | CommentsNAHA Statement on the Medicare Hospice Reform and Savings Act of 2009
The National Alliance for Hospice Access (NAHA) endorsed legislation introduced today that reforms Medicare hospice regulations, improves patient access to hospice care, provides needed relief to hundreds of threatened hospices and saves the Medicare program as much as $2 billion a year. Read More→
Federal Court Suspends Cap Demand
Posted by: | CommentsOn Monday, July 13, in Federal Court in Los Angeles, NAHA member LA Haven Hospice won its legal challenge to the validity of HHS’ hospice cap regulation. In a detailed written opinion, posted on this web site, the Federal judge held that the cap calculation regulation is invalid because HHS failed to follow Congress’ mandate to allocate each patient’s cap allowance across years of service. The opinion makes for good reading. Although proceedings are ongoing, the court immediately suspended LA Haven Hospice’s 2006 cap repayment obligations ($2.3 million). Read More→
